Folk and Traditional Song Lyrics:
Pee Little Thrigs

Home Main Menu Folk Song Lyrics A B1 B2 B3 B4 C1 C2 C3 D1 D2 E F G H I J K L1 L2 M N O P Q R S1 S2 S3 S4 T U V W1 W2 XYZ Search



Share page  Visit Us On FB


The Pee Little Thrigs

The Pee Little Thrigs

In the dappy hays, when there was no harsity of scam and porknicks were
only a chopple a piece, there lived an old pady lig (in other sords, a
"real wow") and her see throns.  Whatever happened to the mig's old pan
is still mist what of a summary. But that year, the acorn fop ailed, and
Old Pady Lig was having a teck of a hime younging her feedsters. Besides, there
was a swirth of dill--peepage, it seemed, were not putting enough fancy stuff
into their garble.  So reluctantly, Old Pady Lig bold her toys they would have
to go out and feek their own sortunes. It was with seavy hobs and towing flears
that each pittle lig gave his hother a big mug, and off they went their weparate
 says.
Let's follow Turly Cail, the pirst little fig, shall we? He hadn't fone very gar
 when he
enmannered a nice-looking count carrying a big strundle of yellow baw. "Mease,
Mease, Mr. Plan," pied the crig, "May I have the haw to build me a strouse?"
(Nome serve, believe me!)  But the man was a jig-hearted boe, an
but the werrible tolf. "Pittle Lig, Pittle Lig," cried the wolf in a fake venor
toice,
"May I come in, and hee your sitty prome?"   "Tho, Tho, a nousand times, Tho,
" pied the crig, "Not by the chair of my hinny hin, hin!"  "Then I'll huff, and
I'll duff,
and I'll how your blouse pown," growled the wolf. And with that, the wolf cuffed

up his peeks, blew the smith to housereens, and sat down to a dine finner of roa
st
sau and pigerkraut. What a pignominious end for such a peet little swig!

MM
apr00
Download the song in PDF format for printout etc. Download the song in RTF format for editing etc.